and the vast majority of yemenees are against the way the u.s. and sali had their relationship and conducted it in yemen. i think if there were elections what may come out is something that washington may not like. in terms of the death poll thus far the most conservative estimates say that up to a hundred people have been killed. other estimates say that the number is far higher. is there a threshold or an expected potential event that would tip this over into a situation where international intervention would be expected, not necessarily with libya as a precedent, but where it would be expected in terms of the kind of thing the u.n. gets involved in? i was communicating with a colleague on the ground in yemen right now and what she told me is that so far people are not calling for military intervention there. if ali asaleh the president of yemen were to use his most elite u.s. trained forces in a systematic way to target the protesters you could see massive blood shed that would
i think if there were elections what may come out is something that washington may not like. in terms of the death poll thus far the most conservative estimates say that up to a hundred people have been killed. other estimates say that the number is far higher. is there a threshold or an expected potential event that would tip this over into a situation where international intervention would be expected, not necessarily with libya as a precedent, but where it would be expected in terms of the kind of thing the u.n. gets involved in? i was communicating with a colleague on the ground in yemen right now and what she told me is that so far people are not calling for military intervention there. if ali asaleh the president of yemen were to use his most elite u.s. trained forces in a systematic way to target the protesters you could see massive blood shed that would probably spark calls for that but the u.s. would be wise to be very conservative about intervening further in yemen. remem
yemenees are against the way the u.s. and sali had their relationship and conducted it in yemen. i think if there were elections what may come out is something that washington may not like. in terms of the death poll thus far the most conservative estimates say that up to a hundred people have been killed. other estimates say that the number is far higher. is there a threshold or an expected potential event that would tip this over into a situation where international intervention would be expected, not necessarily with libya as a precedent, but where it would be expected in terms of the kind of thing the u.n. gets involved in? i was communicating with a colleague on the ground in yemen right now and what she told me is that so far people are not calling for military intervention there. if ali asaleh the president of yemen were to use his most elite u.s. trained forces in a systematic way to target the protesters you could see massive blood shed that would probably spark calls for
violation of title nine, its federal funding could be in jeopardy and, contessa, last year that was more than $500 million. wow. peter, thanks. in japan, officials tried and failed to seal a leak at the crippled fukushima nuclear plant. yet radioactive water is still pouring into the pacific ocean. they think the leak is coming from an eight inch crack in the concrete pit holding power cables near reactor number two. they will use a dye to try to trace the path of the leak. the official death poll from the earthquake and tsunami is more than 12,000, with more than 15,000 people still officially listed as missing. why a couple of early prime states want the republican party to move the convention out of the sunshine state. plus, charlie sheen s big debut for his torpedo of truth tour. and let s just put it this way, he didn t exactly start off winning.
several hundred are killed as the water sweeps away ships, vehicles, buildings, sparking fires, devastating coastal communities, and even threatening some nuclear plants over there. meanwhile, on this side of the pacific, waves are blanketing things, it s hitting hawaii this past hour and the west coast is now bracing for an impact later this morning. we have live reports. and we re going to hear from fema director right here ondale rundo daily rundown. let s get to the rundown. we will start with the breaking news out of japan. a catastrophic 8.9 earthquake in japan today. the largest earthquake in japan s recorded history. the latest death poll, the ap is reporting japanese police saying 200 to 300 bodies have been found in the northeastern coastal area. the quake sent tsunami waves barreling across the pacific, coming on shore in hawaii about